The Robbers in Natural Disasters
By

Dr. Habib Siddiqui


Natural disasters are always difficult times for the victims to go through. For 
most people, they are traumatic experiences. In an earthquake of the large 
seismic magnitude that recently hit Haiti (January 12) and Chile (February 27) 
there is very little people could prepare against. Chile and Haiti were struck 
by earthquakes of magnitude 8.8 and 7.0, respectively. In spite of the progress 
that science has made in recent decades, we are still at the mercy of such 
natural disasters. Our best efforts can’t even predict earthquakes.


A preventive measure, therefore, has always been about how to minimize the 
effects of an earthquake. Preparedness and education are sure recipes for 
curtailing effects of such disasters. It is known that more people die from 
falling structures, heavy objects, beams, roofs, etc. than earthquake itself. 
The lighter the structures are the lower the casualties from an earthquake. As 
such, most modern states require strict building codes, e.g., so that buildings 
can withstand at least a 7.0 scale tremor. But as we know too well policies 
don’t necessarily translate into enforcement, and as such building codes are 
hardly followed in most third world countries where with the right kind of 
bribe and government connection almost anything can be bought and evaded. It is 
no surprise to learn that the death toll in Haiti may reach 300,000 while the 
comparable number in Chile may not even reach a thousand. This is interesting 
given the fact that the earthquake in Chile is the seventh strongest ever 
recorded in history, and was nearly hundred times stronger than that of Haiti. 
Credit there for less casualty goes to the slain President Salvador Allende of 
Chile who in 1972, a year before his overthrow in a CIA-coup, enforced strict 
seismic building codes. This revelation may come as a surprise to free market 
fundamentalists, the disciples of Milton Friedman -- who was opposed to any 
government regulation, seeing them as yet another infringement on capitalist 
freedom.


One of the most common features of such natural disasters has been the looting 
that follows. Very few people are left with enough supplies to meet their 
thirst and hunger. Thus, when disaster relief responses are slow in coming, 
everyone is for itself and many people turn into violence, looting stores and 
markets. Not surprisingly, we heard news reports filled with images of bands of 
men armed with rifles, metal stakes and hatchets stalking the streets of 
Port-au-Prince and the coastal city of Concepci?n, attacking firefighters, 
looting and burning supermarkets and adding an air of menace to the already 
tragic situation.


Politics, or more appropriately public diplomacy, is often difficult to be 
separated from natural disasters. Wherever disasters strike, the local 
government can become a casualty. Some wealthy nations don’t want to be seen as 
filthy, heartless, misers that don’t care about the plights of the victims and 
are, thus, often the first ones to send relief supplies. Some humanitarian 
gestures are outright hypocritical and insincere though. Consider the case of 
Israeli relief work during the recent Haiti crisis. There was so much publicity 
around the “humanitarian” activities of the Israeli (IDF) Medical Corps, 
providing first aid services to injured victims of the earthquake that we 
hardly heard anything about the sincere and noble work of the Medecins Sans 
Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders), let alone the Zakat Foundation of the USA 
or other relief agencies.


Haiti offered a picture perfect venue for Israel’s public diplomacy. Press 
officers from the Israeli military were flown in, as were photographers and a 
video team to document the work of Israeli medical and rescue personnel. They 
distributed daily footage to the press.  “In Europe, Israel’s image is defined 
by the Goldstone report, so news items like those coming from Haiti can 
definitely help change that image,” said an Israeli official referring to the 
United Nations report that accused both Israel and Hamas of committing war 
crimes.1


As confirmed by the Israeli official, the Israeli relief effort in Haiti was a 
charade to hide Israel’s dirty past. Just about a year earlier, some 1500 
Palestinians, a vast majority being unarmed civilians, were killed like cats 
and dogs in Gaza by the same IDF. The Goldstone Report, endorsed by the UN 
Human Rights Council, accused Israel of committing war crimes. The three-week 
long savage, genocidal blitzkrieg damaged or destroyed tens of thousands of 
homes, 15 of Gaza’s 27 hospitals and 43 of its 110 primary health care 
facilities, 800 water wells, 186 greenhouses, and nearly all of its 10,000 
family farms; leaving 50,000 homeless, 400,000-500,000 without running water, 
one million without electricity, and resulting in acute food shortages. If the 
Netanyahu government in Israel was sincere to help those in need it need not 
travel 10,500 kilometers to Haiti. Gaza is only half an hour away.


The blatant Israeli hypocrisy with Haiti’s relief work was not lost amongst 
conscientious journalists and activists though. Akiva Eldar, an Israeli 
columnist of the newspaper Haaretz, wrote on January 18, just a few days after 
the Haiti earthquake, “A few days before Israeli physicians rushed to save the 
lives of injured Haitians, the authorities at the Erez checkpoint prevented 17 
people from passing through in order to get to a Ramallah hospital for urgent 
corneal transplant surgery.” “Perhaps they voted for Hamas. The remarkable 
identification (among Israelis) with the victims of the terrible tragedy in 
distant Haiti only underscores the indifference to the ongoing suffering of the 
people of Gaza,” he lamented, referring to Israel’s tight blockade of the 
territory.

Another group of people that rush into the territories that are hit by natural 
disasters are the missionaries – the soul-snatchers. And Haiti had her share of 
such visitors. Soon after George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq that devastated the 
country in a Judeo-Christian orgy of mass murder and war crimes, destroying its 
entire infrastructure, putting the clock back to pre-Islamic Jahiliyah, we saw 
those missionaries doing their lord’s work amongst the victims with Arabic 
Bibles in their hands! Reportedly they had the blessing of Bush Jr., who 
claimed to have direct line with God. And before that we saw the Korean 
missionaries in Afghanistan with Dari and Pushto Bibles to salvage the “lost” 
Muslim souls! The Australian Baptist missionaries have drawn much notoriety for 
their declared goals to save the souls of Muslims in South Asia.


So, it was left to the American Baptists from Idaho to now work on the 
voodoo-ridden “lost” Christian souls of Haiti. The tele-evangelist Pat 
Robertson declared that the Haitians had brought the earthquake unto themselves 
by mixing voodoo religion with Christianity. He should explain this to the 
pure-bred Christian Armenians, Italians and (now) Chileans, or better yet, the 
Christian residents of California and New Orleans. Well, they may not be the 
right kind of Christians, in the dictionary of bigots like Pat!


What is so outrageous with the activities of these Idaho Baptist missionaries 
is that they tried to smuggle 33 children out of Haiti illegally. On 5 February 
ten missionaries were charged in Haiti with criminal association and 
kidnapping. The missionaries claimed they were rescuing orphaned children but 
investigations revealed that more than 20 of the children had been taken from 
their parents after they were told the children would have a better life in 
America. These parents were not told that their children would be put up for 
adoption. The children are now being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS 
Children's Village in Port-au-Prince. An official there, Patricia Vargas, said 
none of the children who are old enough to talk have said they were orphans.


As noted by Slate.com most of the children came from the quake-ravaged village 
of Callebas. Their stories contradicted Laura Silsby's (the group leader) 
account that the children came from collapsed orphanages or were handed over by 
distant relatives. She said the Americans believed they had all the paperwork 
needed — documents she said she obtained in the Dominican Republic — to take 
the children out of Haiti. She lied not only to the parents of those children, 
but also to the group's Dominican lawyer (they also have a Haitian one), who 
said only minutes before the charges were announced he was planning to charter 
a plane for the group's return to the United States.

New information has surfaced showing that Silsby is an Idaho businesswoman with 
a complicated financial history that involves complaints from employees over 
unpaid wages, state liens on a company bank account and lawsuits in small 
claims court. She defaulted last July on the mortgage on a house in an 
unfinished subdivision here in Meridian, a suburb of Boise, according to the 
Ada County Tax Assessor’s Office. Yet in November, Ms. Silsby registered a new 
nonprofit, the New Life Children’s Refuge, at the address of the house, which 
she bought in 2008 for $358,000. New Life Children’s Refuge is the name of the 
orphanage Ms. Silsby and the nine other Americans charged in Haiti said they 
had planned to establish in the Dominican Republic. Ms. Silsby and her 
business, Personal Shopper, which provides shopping services for Internet 
customers, have faced multiple legal claims. According to state records and 
officials, Personal Shopper has been named 14 times in complaints from 
employees over unpaid wages. Ms. Silsby lost the house in Meridian to 
foreclosure on Dec. 7, records show, and it now stands empty, with signs in the 
yard promoting a foreclosure sale.

Haiti's Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive has labelled the American 
missionaries "kidnappers". American Baptists have requested the U.S. government 
to save the missionaries. Eight of the kidnappers have recently been released 
from the prison. Silsby and another kidnapper missionary remain behind the bar. 
According to Haitian lawyer Edwin Coq, each count of kidnapping carries a 
possible sentence of five to 15 years, while each charge of criminal 
association carries a sentence of anywhere between three to nine years. A 
verdict will likely be handed down in three months.

Many years ago, a Sufi Master told me that the missionaries are the enemies of 
mankind. From the reports I have since collected and read, his wisdom has only 
been confirmed. Jumo Kenyatta, the founder of Kenya, had a famous saying, “When 
the missionaries came to Africa we had land; they had the Bible. They asked us 
to pray with our eyes closed. When we opened them they had our land; we had the 
Bible."

Well, natural disasters are very attractive to robbers of all kinds – the local 
thugs that prey on the vulnerable people, the big brothers that want to 
white-wash their past crimes by robbing long-term memory of the suffering 
people with their petty donations and hypocritical gestures, and not to be 
forgotten in this context the charlatans that want to deflect our attention 
away from their killing fields – the Gaza, and the soul-snatching robbers – the 
missionaries. Lucky are those who can save themselves from such robbers in 
times of natural disasters!


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Dr. Habib Siddiqui is a peace and human rights activist, and chairman of the 
Board of Directors of the Bangladesh Expatriate Council, USA. He writes from 
Pennsylvania. sa...@aol.com


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